John Pomfret Quotes

And when they do spin out of control there are important ramifications that affect America, not just its direct national interest but its broader interests as a nation which has thought of itself as a beacon to other nations, of freedom, liberty, democracy, whatever.

I went back to the States and started at a small newspaper in Riverside County, California, covering the police; I was making $280 a week covering the police.

I think to a certain extent in Bosnia and among the Hutus in Rwanda and also among the Tutsis in Rwanda who then took revenge on the Hutus, there is a sense of being swept up and a sense that the society in which they live has gone mad.

I was posted to China in the summer of 1988, which was the greatest time ever, I think, to have been in China.

My main form of transportation at that time was a bicycle, because bicycles could move though the crowd.

A lot of times when we work overseas we tend to put the experience of someone who lives overseas, a Chinese person or a Korean person or a Bosnian person, within the prism of an American life.

Working overseas is more difficult in that it's much more complicated to get people to open their hearts to you and to tell you information.

Stanford had no journalism program so I just learned by doing, effectively.

Srebrenica was a horrendous war crime and it had to be uncovered.

I grew up in New York City in the late '70s, at a time when U.S. - China relations were something that was on the front page of The New York Times on a regular basis.

The work is a calling. It demands that type of obsession.

In some ways the domestic reporting is a lot easier because Americans will talk to you about anything.

But on the other hand, in the midst of the chaos, you find normal people. You find people who are willing to risk their lives to tell you what they saw, even though they have no dog in the fight.

The desire to become a journalist came really because I very much like living abroad, and like to travel, and wanted to be paid for it.

I think some of the best reporters are the ones who can really illustrate the differences between societies, at the same time trying to connect the fact that there are a lot of shared values in addition to those differences.

And then I was lucky enough to get the opportunity to go to China in 1980, which was quite early.

When I see somebody being mistreated, my eyes tear up and I want to stop it. And I believe that the best thing I can do is to write about it, because if I insert myself into the equation it doesn't really do much good, but if I write about it I think it could do more good.

Whereas with foreign coverage there's a much broader disconnect between you and your audience.

Good journalism, I think, represents life and if you try to organize something too neatly it usually blows up in your face and doesn't really happen the way you want it to.

When you do a job like this you have to like having cold sweat on your back.